Saving Faith By: David Baldacci

granted an interview in all his years at the Agency. But as senior as

he was now, he occasionally had to undertake another sort of

appearance, one that he equally detested. He had to testify before the

House and Senate Select Committees on Intelligence on a series of

matters involving the Agency.

In these “enlightened” times, CIA personnel gave more than one thousand

substantive reports to Congress in a year’s time. So much for covert

operations. Thornhill was able to get through these briefings only by

focusing on how easily he could manipulate the idiots who were supposed

to be overseeing his agency. With their smug looks, they posed to him

questions formulated by their very diligent staffs, who were more

knowledgeable about most intelligence matters than the elected

officials they served.

At least the hearing would be in camera, no public or press allowed. To

Thornhill the First Amendment’s rights to an unfettered press had been

the biggest mistake the Founding Fathers ever made. You had to be damn

careful around the scribes; they looked for every advantage, any chance

to put words in your mouth, trip you up, make the Agency look bad. It

deeply hurt Thornhill that no one seemed to really trust them. Of

course they lied about things; that was their job.

In Thornhill’s mind the CIA was clearly the Hill’s favorite whipping

boy. The members loved to look tough in facing down the super-secret

organization. That really played well back home:

FARMER-TURNED-CONGRESSMAN STARES DOWN SPOOKS. By now Thornhill could

write the headlines himself.

However, today’s hearing actually promised to be positive because the

Agency had scored some serious PR points lately in the most recent

Middle East peace talks. Indeed, largely through Thornhill’s

behind-the-scenes work, the Agency had overall fashioned a more benign,

upstanding image, an image he would seek to bolster today.

Thornhill snapped his briefcase shut and put his pipe in his pocket.

Off to lie to a bunch of liars, and we both know it and we both win, he

thought. Only in America.

CHAPTER 17

“SENATOR,” BuCHANAN SAID, SHAKING HANDS with the tall, elegant-looking

gentleman. Senator Harvey Milstead was a proven leader with high

morals and strong political instincts who offered thoughtful insight on

the issues. A true statesman. That was the public perception. The

reality was that Milstead was a womanizer of the first order and was

addicted to painkillers for a chronically bad back, medications that

sometimes left him incoherent. He also had a worsening drinking

problem. It was years since he had sponsored any meaningful

legislation of his own, although in his prime he had helped enact laws

from which every American now benefited. These days when he spoke, it

was in gobbledygook that no one ever bothered to check up on because he

said it with such authority. Besides, the press loved the charming guy

with such genteel manners, and he held a very powerful leadership

position. He also fed the media machine with a flow of appropriately

timed juicy leaks, and he was quotable to a fault. They loved him,

Buchanan knew. How could they not?

There were five hundred and thirty-five members of Congress-a hundred

senators plus the representatives in the House. Well over

three-quarters of them, Buchanan estimated perhaps a little generously,

were decent, hardworking, genuinely caring men and women who believed

strongly in what they were doing both in Washington and for the people.

Buchanan termed them, collectively, the “Believers.” Buchanan stayed

away from the Believers. Touching those folk would only have earned

him a quick trip to prison.

The rest of the Washington leadership were like Harvey Milstead.

Most were not drunks or womanizers or shells of their former selves,

but, for various reasons, they were ripe for manipulation, easy targets

for the lures Buchanan was tossing overboard.

There were two such groups that Buchanan had successfully recruited

over the years. Forget Republicans and Democrats. The parties

Buchanan was interested in were the members of the venerable “Townies,”

and the group Buchanan had labeled, only somewhat tongue-in-cheek, the

“Zombies.”

The Townies knew the system better than anyone. They were the system.

Washington was their town, hence the nickname. They had all been here

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